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5 #FAIL Signs in Social Media

Marketing, Social Media

Fail WhaleThere is no denying that many people are using social media in one way or another. There’s probably thousands of people each day that are new to it too. There are so many networks to use, and each one gets updated or releases new features so often, that I dare to say that everyone end up learning something the more they use social media. Here at Design Theory, we know a lot, but we try never to say that we’re “Gurus” that know everything. It’s hard to know everything when things change so frequently.

Now we’re online almost 18 or more hours a day. Be it on our smart phones, laptops, tablets, and desktops. One way or another we’re online and engaging our audience, partners, and clients in some form or medium. It’s a lot of work and a lot of constant effort. For the average small business owner deciding whether or not to get into social media, our advice is usually the same:

“Either go all in, or don’t bother at all“

Harsh? Yea a little but the reason why is we hate to see failed attempts. It is very easy to get confused when you’re first starting out. And those little mistakes that may seem insignificant to you, may cost you your online reputation.

Incomplete Social Profile

This is totally a rookie mistake, but you’d be surprised how many social accounts we come across that are only partially filled out. Have you ever seen that big goose egg on Twitter for a person or business? They probably haven’t ventured into the profile settings to upload a cool head shot or picture of their store or logo to show that they’re actually a real account. Or on Linked In where someone may use a picture of a cat or cartoon character as their profile photo. Not only is that not appropriate for that social site because Linked In is considered more of a professional business networking site, it looks like you don’t take your professional profile seriously. Facebook allows you to input a lot of information for your Business Fan page, so take advantage of that. In a lot of cases a successful Facebook page will show up in a Google search way before your website does. So be sure to have your best foot forward with all of your information listed.

Dormant Accounts

These are social media accounts of people or businesses that at some point got started, then got bored, frustrated, or lost interest and stopped using their accounts. I’m sure some of those people thought they’d get back on the wagon once they found some more free time in their day, have an upcoming event or sale that they’ll want to promote in the future, or some reason or other. However valid the excuse may be, to a potential client and your audience it now looks like you don’t take your social account seriously. And in that microsecond you lose a potential ear for someone who was willing to pay attention and follow your brand.

Duplicate Updates & Posts on All Mediums

Speaking of multiple accounts, don’t make the mistake in posting the same posts or status updates across ALL of your social media accounts. Its tacky and lazy. Sure that sounds mean, but it’s true. Most people are members of more than two social media platforms and they’ll see your post on one network then see the same one on another network word for word. It looks like a robot may have posted it or you’re not really putting time to pay attention to the conversations and tones of each network individually.  Point is you can’t mix coffee with juice then a slushy and dip your donut in it and expect everyone else is drinking and eating the same things you are at each table.

Failure to Respond

This one kind of falls under the dormant accounts but in some cases is a bit worse. Have you ever reached out to a fan or someone on a social network and never hear a response? Or have you read a post that was just posted in the last few minutes of you reading it, and you like it and reply, and you never hear a response to your reply? Yea those are bad. It looks like you’re just talking and could care less about listening. Which really defeats the purpose of being “social” on these networks. There’s some etiquette for each network on reasonable response times.

You Think It Shouldn’t Cost Much

I saved this one for last because it seems to always be the elephant in the room. To be a little transparent, we get a good amount of emails and phone calls requesting quotes on managing creating social media accounts for small businesses. I would say the number one hesitation for us seems to be price. Yet we’re not the cheapest business in our local market and certainly not online. To give you an idea of a median price for a full package for social media management and marketing for Google+, Twitter, Facebook, Linked In, YouTube, and Pinterest; you would be paying around $2,000 a month. This includes metrics, tracking, custom Facebook tabs and landing pages, Call to Action and ongoing marketing initiatives, and of course constant up to the minute engagement.

After reading all this, I’d love to hear your thoughts and even your own experiences. Lets start a dialog with other readers in the comments below.

 

Facebook will never charge you, here’s why

All Posts, Social Media

Facebook iconOver this past weekend, many of my Facebook friends (on my personal Facebook side) started posting or copying and pasting a message about how Facebook was going to be charging a fee to use their services. When I first saw the message I thought someone was joking. Then I saw it again from someone else, then again.  Here’s the message:

Facebook Charge Message

“FACEBOOK JUST RELEASED THEIR PRICE GRID FOR MEMBERSHIP. $9.99 PER MONTH FOR GOLD MEMBER SERVICES, $6.99 PER MONTH FOR SILVER MEMBER SERVICES, $3.99 PER MONTH FOR BRONZE MEMBER SERVICES, FREE IF YOU COPY AND PASTE THIS MESSAGE BEFORE MIDNIGHT TONIGHT. WHEN YOU SIGN ON TOMORROW MORNING YOU WILL BE PROMPTED FOR PAYMENT INFO…IT IS OFFICIAL IT WAS EVEN ON THE NEWS. FACEBOOK WILL START CHARGING DUE TO THE NEW PROFILE CHANGES. IF YOU COPY THIS ON YOUR WALL YOUR ICON WILL TURN BLUE AND FACEBOOK WILL BE FREE FOR YOU. PLEASE PASS THIS MESSAGE ON IF NOT YOUR ACCOUNT WILL BE DELETED IF YOU DO NOT PAY”

One of the first tip offs was how it was the same exact message and all in CAPS. I mean really? People still do that these days? Remember way back in American Online chat rooms when you’d get blasted for “yelling” when you typed? And what news station really reported this? I know there isn’t much fact checking these days, but don’t you think that if in fact Facebook was planning to incorporate a new fee, there would be several emails and probably a press conference for it? Now I watched the boring F8 Conference 2011, and with all the new apps coming down the pipes with Open Graph, a new user fee would have been discussed. There’s plenty of other concerns with user privacy to be up in arms about for now.

Being the largest social network on the planet, they’re already generating plenty of money from ads and data mining before they’d incorporate standard user fees. The number one goal of Facebook is to get and keep you using the site as much and as often as possible. The more traffic, the more ad viability, the more game play, and the more search.

Now I wouldn’t rule out any premium apps that may come down the pipes sooner or later though. A lot of current games will allow you to play for free, but there are “in-app purchases” you can make. I would see a slow introduction to premium apps that carry some type of subscription fee to use. For example, if you wanted to listen to XM Satellite stations while in Facebook, you can if you either already have a stand alone subscription, or you can easily create a new account within Facebook with your existing credentials and say a PayPal account or your actual credit card information. None of this is true right now, but this is an example of what could happen.

Let me know your thoughts on all of this in the comments below.  Even if you were one of the users that pasted that message into your status update, I’d like to know what really compelled you to do so.

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